Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason we have these sign are people like you who take up the parking in front of our houses.
Yes, that's evident.
How come only certain residential SFH neighborhoods near commerce get this restriction in MoCo, but others do not? What distinguishes these neighborhoods that aren't their own city (the way, say, Rockville is)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC isn't restricted like that. You get two free hours. After that you need to have residential parking zone sticker. The parking restrictions usually lapse in the evening anyway. I've heard that some DC 'hoods like Cleveland Park and Tenleytown which are near restaurants and movie theaters want to have a more strict street parking scheme like Bethesda.
This is no longer true actually. Large areas of Shaw and the U Street area have had new restrictions put in place since the summer, completely restricting at least one side of the street.
How do they determine which houses get to be on "the sunny side of the street"?
I don't know how they decided. I doubt anyone in our neighborhood cares about parking across the street, as long as they can be somewhere on the street and not 2 blocks away.
Anonymous wrote:I will say in defense of this, where we live they are building a huge new apartment building and grocery store (Shaw on 7th Street). Our homes do not have driveways and unless your postage stamp backyard has been converted to a parking space, there is no where else for residents to park but the street. The added restrictions where we live are an attempt to allow some spaces to be reserved for actual residents. One side of the street is still two hour parking, although when street sweeping starts its going to be sticky for visitors. Everyone gets a permanent visitors pass now at least.
Anonymous wrote:The reason we have these sign are people like you who take up the parking in front of our houses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC isn't restricted like that. You get two free hours. After that you need to have residential parking zone sticker. The parking restrictions usually lapse in the evening anyway. I've heard that some DC 'hoods like Cleveland Park and Tenleytown which are near restaurants and movie theaters want to have a more strict street parking scheme like Bethesda.
This is no longer true actually. Large areas of Shaw and the U Street area have had new restrictions put in place since the summer, completely restricting at least one side of the street.
How do they determine which houses get to be on "the sunny side of the street"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC isn't restricted like that. You get two free hours. After that you need to have residential parking zone sticker. The parking restrictions usually lapse in the evening anyway. I've heard that some DC 'hoods like Cleveland Park and Tenleytown which are near restaurants and movie theaters want to have a more strict street parking scheme like Bethesda.
This is no longer true actually. Large areas of Shaw and the U Street area have had new restrictions put in place since the summer, completely restricting at least one side of the street.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of neighborhoods have street parking that's restricted to residents, not just Edgemoor. Pretty much all of residential DC as well as any neighborhood in MoCo that I can think of. Try paying for a garage next time.
Anonymous wrote:DC isn't restricted like that. You get two free hours. After that you need to have residential parking zone sticker. The parking restrictions usually lapse in the evening anyway. I've heard that some DC 'hoods like Cleveland Park and Tenleytown which are near restaurants and movie theaters want to have a more strict street parking scheme like Bethesda.
Pretty much all of residential DC as well as any neighborhood in MoCo that I can think of.